The relationship between the adherence to the mediterranean diet, nutrient intake and anthropometric, measurements for adult individuals living in Cyprus

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Mattioli 1885

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

Objective: The Mediterranean diet (MD) is recommended as a nutrition model that exhibits preventive characteristics against several chronic diseases with its varied and balanced nutrition pattern. The present study aimed to determine the adherence to MD and the relationship among adherence to MD, nutrition, anthropometric measurements of adult individuals living in Cyprus. Methods: The study participants comprised 705 individuals between 19-30 years old. The face-to-face interviews with them comprised general information, the MD adherence score, frequency of food consumption, anthropometric measurements. The data collected were evaluated using the appropriate statistical analyses. Results: Of the study participants, 35.7% had low adherence to MD, 57.1% had medium adherence, and only 7.2% had high adherence. A statistical difference was found between the participant's adherence level and body weight, body fat percentage, lean body mass, body water ratio, waist circumference (p<0.05). We observed that participants who had low adherence to MD had higher body weight, body fat ratio, body lean tissue mass. A statistically significant difference was observed among the three groups in terms of fiber, monounsaturated-fatty-acid, cholesterol, vitamins A and D intakes (p< 0.05). Daily fiber, monounsaturated-fatty-acid intakes were lower. In addition, we observed that individuals with high adherence to MD had higher vitamin A and D intakes than the participants. Conclusion: Similar to the results in the literature, we observed that individual adherence to MD might create positive effects on some anthropometric measurements and some nutrient intakes. Therefore, MD is considered to be a healthy diet based on those results. © 2022 Mattioli 1885. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Anthropometric measurements, Chronic Diseases, Mediterranean Diet, Nutrient, Obesity

Journal or Series

Progress in Nutrition

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Volume

24

Issue

2

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